Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria

The Decision Support System for Agricultural Technology Transfer (DSSAT) was used to quantify the impact of climate change on maize yield and the potential benefits of the use of drought-tolerant maize variety over non-drought tolerant variety in savanna ecological zones of Nigeria. Projections of m...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tofa, A.I., Kamara, A.Y., Babaji, B.A., Akinseye, Folorunso M., Bebeley, J.F.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114106
_version_ 1855525200352772096
author Tofa, A.I.
Kamara, A.Y.
Babaji, B.A.
Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Bebeley, J.F.
author_browse Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Babaji, B.A.
Bebeley, J.F.
Kamara, A.Y.
Tofa, A.I.
author_facet Tofa, A.I.
Kamara, A.Y.
Babaji, B.A.
Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Bebeley, J.F.
author_sort Tofa, A.I.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Decision Support System for Agricultural Technology Transfer (DSSAT) was used to quantify the impact of climate change on maize yield and the potential benefits of the use of drought-tolerant maize variety over non-drought tolerant variety in savanna ecological zones of Nigeria. Projections of maize yields were estimated for three locations representing different agro-climatic zones and soil conditions, in the mid-century (2040–2069) and end-century (2070–2099) under representative concentration pathways scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5) against the baseline period (1980–2009). Relative to the baseline period, the ensemble Global Circulation Models (GCMs) predicted significant increase in minimum and maximum temperatures and seasonal rainfall across the sites. In the mid-century, ensemble GCMs predicted temperatures increase between 1.7–2.4 °C for RCP4.5 and 2.2–2.9 °C for RCP8.5. By end-century, the temperature increases between 2.2–3.0 °C under RCP4.5 and 3.9–5.0 °C under RCP8.5. Predicted seasonal rainfall increase between 1.2–7% for RCP4.5 and 0.03–10.6% for RCP8.5 in the mid-century. By end of century, rainfall is expected to increase between 2–6.7% for RCP4.5 and 3.3–20.1% for RCP8.5. The DSSAT model predictions indicated a negative impact on maize yield in all the selected sites, but the degree of the impact varies with variety and location. In the mid-century, the results showed that the yield of the non–drought tolerant maize variety, SAMMAZ-16 will decline by 13–19% under RCP4.5 and 19–28% under RCP8.5. The projection by end-century indicates a decline in yield by 18–26% under RCP4.5 and 38–47% under RCP8.5. The yield of the drought-tolerant variety is projected to decline by 9–18% for RCP4.5 and 14–25% for RCP8.5 in the mid-century and 13–23% under RCP4.5 and 32–43% under RCP8.5 by the end-century. The higher temperatures by both emission scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5) were primarily shown to cause more yield losses for non-drought-tolerant variety than that of the drought-tolerant variety. There will be 1–6% less reduction in yield when drought-tolerant variety is used. However, the higher yield reductions in the range of − 13 to − 43% predicted for the drought-tolerant variety by the end of the century across the study areas highlighted the need to modify the maize breeding scheme to combine both tolerances to drought and heat stresses in the agro-ecological zones of northern Nigeria.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace114106
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1141062025-11-12T05:34:10Z Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria Tofa, A.I. Kamara, A.Y. Babaji, B.A. Akinseye, Folorunso M. Bebeley, J.F. drought tolerance varieties maize crop production climate change nigeria The Decision Support System for Agricultural Technology Transfer (DSSAT) was used to quantify the impact of climate change on maize yield and the potential benefits of the use of drought-tolerant maize variety over non-drought tolerant variety in savanna ecological zones of Nigeria. Projections of maize yields were estimated for three locations representing different agro-climatic zones and soil conditions, in the mid-century (2040–2069) and end-century (2070–2099) under representative concentration pathways scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5) against the baseline period (1980–2009). Relative to the baseline period, the ensemble Global Circulation Models (GCMs) predicted significant increase in minimum and maximum temperatures and seasonal rainfall across the sites. In the mid-century, ensemble GCMs predicted temperatures increase between 1.7–2.4 °C for RCP4.5 and 2.2–2.9 °C for RCP8.5. By end-century, the temperature increases between 2.2–3.0 °C under RCP4.5 and 3.9–5.0 °C under RCP8.5. Predicted seasonal rainfall increase between 1.2–7% for RCP4.5 and 0.03–10.6% for RCP8.5 in the mid-century. By end of century, rainfall is expected to increase between 2–6.7% for RCP4.5 and 3.3–20.1% for RCP8.5. The DSSAT model predictions indicated a negative impact on maize yield in all the selected sites, but the degree of the impact varies with variety and location. In the mid-century, the results showed that the yield of the non–drought tolerant maize variety, SAMMAZ-16 will decline by 13–19% under RCP4.5 and 19–28% under RCP8.5. The projection by end-century indicates a decline in yield by 18–26% under RCP4.5 and 38–47% under RCP8.5. The yield of the drought-tolerant variety is projected to decline by 9–18% for RCP4.5 and 14–25% for RCP8.5 in the mid-century and 13–23% under RCP4.5 and 32–43% under RCP8.5 by the end-century. The higher temperatures by both emission scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5) were primarily shown to cause more yield losses for non-drought-tolerant variety than that of the drought-tolerant variety. There will be 1–6% less reduction in yield when drought-tolerant variety is used. However, the higher yield reductions in the range of − 13 to − 43% predicted for the drought-tolerant variety by the end of the century across the study areas highlighted the need to modify the maize breeding scheme to combine both tolerances to drought and heat stresses in the agro-ecological zones of northern Nigeria. 2021 2021-06-24T11:43:45Z 2021-06-24T11:43:45Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114106 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Tofa, A.I., Kamara, A.Y., Babaji, B.A., Akinseye, F.M. & Bebeley, J.F. (2021). Assessing the use of a drought-tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria. Scientific Reports, 11(1), 1-16.
spellingShingle drought tolerance
varieties
maize
crop production
climate change
nigeria
Tofa, A.I.
Kamara, A.Y.
Babaji, B.A.
Akinseye, Folorunso M.
Bebeley, J.F.
Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title_full Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title_fullStr Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title_short Assessing the use of a drought‑tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of Nigeria
title_sort assessing the use of a drought tolerant variety as adaptation strategy for maize production under climate change in the savannas of nigeria
topic drought tolerance
varieties
maize
crop production
climate change
nigeria
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114106
work_keys_str_mv AT tofaai assessingtheuseofadroughttolerantvarietyasadaptationstrategyformaizeproductionunderclimatechangeinthesavannasofnigeria
AT kamaraay assessingtheuseofadroughttolerantvarietyasadaptationstrategyformaizeproductionunderclimatechangeinthesavannasofnigeria
AT babajiba assessingtheuseofadroughttolerantvarietyasadaptationstrategyformaizeproductionunderclimatechangeinthesavannasofnigeria
AT akinseyefolorunsom assessingtheuseofadroughttolerantvarietyasadaptationstrategyformaizeproductionunderclimatechangeinthesavannasofnigeria
AT bebeleyjf assessingtheuseofadroughttolerantvarietyasadaptationstrategyformaizeproductionunderclimatechangeinthesavannasofnigeria